Newspaper Page Text

1
KJCMOM
IJJOO
C+W«!E
To
WlW
A
-THOUSAND
■aen-vAies!
,
tPo'P!
ffcETTrElf
T-tlAf
C
ontest
-L
a
-
-i
ONLY
-V^A'l'E.
To
rn>u
v
/
Two
CAKes
\
OF
gOAT>
A
MAM
at
T-ff
a
TDOO'P
\AJILL
GlvE.
A
T+Ious
A
NT)
•fcOOU-AVS
To
T+I
e
jlTH?iTOME
T-HAT
•
(TEACHES
T-H
e
.1^
A
uj
'Ri&qr,
ill
]
,TtU-
i4lM,'73>UT
I
C
an
'
t
\
S
ee
nw
-
hv
*JL
VsiE
5rHoUk4>N'T
'
TAKE.
A
C-H
an
/GE.!
TOTT
u
^E-
.Kwociriwi
hi*
forebud
and
paddled
about
Pinocchio
’
*
throat
with
a
nice
new
little
oar.
“
Nothing
wrong
here.
He'*
per
­
fectly
all
right.
What
did
you
think
was
wrong
with
him.
God
­
mother?\
\H*'s
so
polite.
Doctor.\
\Hm-m.
A
bad
sign.
Whon
a
boy*
loo
polite
—
m-rn-n
—
very
hgd
sign
that.\
“
And
he
doesn't
want
to
eat.\
“
Ah,
that's
very
serious.
When
a
boy
Is
polite
and
doesn't
want
to
eat
—
ah-h
—
something
very
serious
Is
the
matter.\
\But
what
la
It.
Doctor?\
\That's
Just
It.
What
Is
It?
These
are
symptoms.\
•Dear,
dear!
Of
what.
Doctor?\
\Of
what
alls
him.
of
course.
Find
that
out
and
you
cure
him\;
and
the
doctor
leaned
back
In
his
chair.
\How
can
X
And
out?\
\Mostly
you
can't.\
\Can't
he
tell
me?\
“
If
he
could
ho
wouldn't
be
a
boy.\
\Why
docan't
he
say
what
Is
the
mailer
with
him?\
\Because
he
doesn
’
t
know
him
­
self.
They
never
do.\
And
the
doctor
smiled
happily,
rose
to
his
feet,
and
picked
up
his
Utile
black
bag.
\When
you
And
out
anything,
send
for
me.
I'll
keep
an
eye
on
him
myself
and
let
you
know
If
X
lind
out
anything.
Let's
wish
ourselves
good
luck\
and
away
he
went
humming
a
little
song
under
hl»
breath.
It
hadn't
murh
meaning,
but
It
seemed
to
please
him
greatly,
,
for
he
n*ng
It
over
and
over.
\From
Wlmpledon
to
Wap-
plcton
Is
fourteen
mile.
From
Wnpjdeton
to
Wlm-
piedon
Is
fourteen
mile.\
hallway,
a
hallway
that
stretched
oot
for
year*
and
years.
And
all
along
the
hallway,
one
ex
­
actly
behind
the
other,
each
with
hla
hands
on
the
shoulder
of
the
one
In
front,
was
a
row
of
himself.
Imagine.
A
row
of
Plnocchloa
each
exactly
Uke
the
other
save
that
each
was
a
hair's
breadth
big
­
ger
as
they
came
toward
him.
and
a
hair
’
s
breadth
smaller
as
they
went
away
from
him.
Each
was
forever
a
part
of
him.
Each
march
­
ed
steadily
forward
and
each
marched
steadily
back.
To
Plnoc-
■chlo
they
seemed
to
be
flashing
by
with
terrific
speed
and
all
the
while
standing
still.
Smiles
and
glad
flitted
across
his
face
as
he
watched
the
procession
of
the
shadow
children
hr
knew
so
well
He
almost
cried
at
the
sight
of
the
llttlest
one
far
down
tho
shad
­
owy
line.
He
was
so
little
and
so
faded
thst
he
would
scarcely
have
known
him
at
all
had
it
not
been
for
hie
very
sharp
nose
and
the
one
blue
rose
that
was
left
of
the
firet
paper
dress
Gepetto
had
made
By
GLENN
CHAFFIN
and
HAL
FORREST
TAILSPIN
TOMMY
—
Tommy
’
#
In
Luck
/
HERE
IT
IS!
}
IT
’
S
A
LETTER
FOR
j
TOMMY
>
TOMKINS!
f
WHAT
THE
'
heck
kino
of
AN
ANlrtlLE
IS
A
6REA5E
.
\
MONKEY?/
JTH*T
AIR-MAI
LV
'
FELLER
ORORPED
SOMETHIN
’
,
ALL
’
RKHT--
WONDER
iWMAT
IT
IS
?
Jr
Ha
chuckled
Aloud
at
the
sight
of
e
scarecrow
flapping
and
kick
­
ing
the
‘
crows
out
of
a
cornfield.
A
Watchful
Rooster
perched
on
the
shoulder
of
another
cast
a
shadow
over
his
face.
He
smiled
again
at
the
Sight
of
a
tousled
little
chap
carrying
a
bowl
of
water
In
both
hands,
a
scrap
of
rainbow
showing
from
one
corner
of
a
torn
pocket.
Most
delightful
of
all.
each
child
In
the
procession
held
a
tiny
little
creature
by
the
hand.
Strange
lit
­
tle
creatures
they
were,
and
strangely
lovely,
and
Pinoeehlo
knew
them
at
once
as
his
most
pre-
THE
NEBBS
—
Gone,
But
Not
Forgotten
f
WELL,
MERC'S
CAES
AC'S
'v.
CHECK
AMD
IT'S
A
PEACH
\
.WE
LOST
A
GOOD
CUSTOMER.
OUT
L.
SUESS
MOTHER
J
V
VJ|LL
Be:
GLAD
TO
Tbirrte
hocus
COUTlkAJAU-V
REMIkiDlklG
THE
MlOULD
BE
SOOerv
LEADER
Mas.
HE.lT
ABOUT
HER
EACLV
LIFE
WHEN
THEY
BOTH
WERE
SERVANT
GIRLS,
LOAS
TOO
MUCH
FOR
UESZ
SO
SUE
LEFT
FOR
HOME
/
HER
&0-MG
AWAY
'S
OUST
LIKE
TAKING
OCF
A
PAIR
CC
LEW
i
t
,(_,
u
T
SUOES
TO
/-
sound,'
\Strangs.\
thought
the
doctor.
\That
noise-
ought
to
waken
the
deaf
and
the
dead.\
He
trumpeted
through
hie
hands
\Pinocchlo-o!
Hullo-o,
Pinocchlo-o!
Want
to
come
f
............
\
Lightly
an
a
chio
scudded
df
He
hopped
inte
doctor,
\To
Naples.
\
\To
Naples?
of
u
boat
'
curled
leaf
Plnoc-
wn
the
sloping
roof
the
scat
beside
the
could
take
you.\
\Huh!
Anybody
could
do
tha(.
I
|
thought
doctors
could
do
anything
they
wanted
to
do.\
\In
reason.
In
reason.
What
do
you
want
to
go
to
Naples
for?\
“
That's
my
home.
Where
Gepet-
\I
thought
you
ran
away
from
there?\
r*l
dkln't.
I
ran
away
from
By
FRANK
GAS
BUGGIES
—
A
Letter
For
Alec
\Two
and
the
same
thing\
\You
sound
like
the
Watchful
Rooster.
He
keeps
saying,
Two
and
two.'
and
'Look
behind
It.'
You
know
what
I'd
like
to
do?
I'd
like
to
gel
big
enough
to
go
home
and
buy
a
little
house
and
a
goat
and
a
garden
and
ng
trees
and
olive
trees
for
Gcpctto.
I
could
live
with
him
anti
feed
the
goat.
I
could
work
<iard
and
lake
care
of
Gepe'
to.\
\But
you
ran
sway
-----
\
-
“
I
tell
you
I
didn't
run
away
from
Gepetto.
I
ran
away
from
echooL
I
thought
that
America
was
a
land
where
you
did
what
you
liked
and
if
you
didn't
like
It.
you
didn't
do
It.
But
It
le
worse
than
home
for
going
to
school.
Do
you
have
to
go
to
school
forever
and
ever?
I
don't
wantto
go
to
school
\
“
What
do
you
want
to
do?
”
\I
want
to
go
home
and
play
In
:
the
puppet
shows
and
make
a
lot
j
of
money
and
buy
Gepetto
a
pink
,
house
and
buy
Urn
-----
”
\That's
line,
bft
haven't
you
got
to
go
to
school
to
learn
tha
trade?
How
are
you
going
to
be
a
puppet
If
1
3
THE
VERY
IDEA
OF
THAT
OLD
SHE-HEN
WANTING
TO
SEE
MY
BELOVED
VIOLA
’
S
SACRED
LETTER
.
GOSH,
I
’
M
ALL
A
TREMBLE
TO
SEE
^
WHAT
SHE
SAYS
ABOUT
J
ME
NOT
BEING
AT
____
/
THE
PARTY.
.
HERE'S
A
LETTER
C
THAT'S
COME
FOR
YOU.
SMELLS
ALL
PERFUMERY
LIKE
A
WOMAN
MIGHT
A
WRIT
IT.
WHO
D'YtXJ
RECKON
IT
COULD
A
_
—
■
BEEN
?
I'M
ALL
,,
-------
----
7
A
FLUTTER
,
^
«
MR.
SMART.
J
X?N
J
HUH!
HE
NEEDN'T
T
A
3EEN
SO
UPPITY.
>.
ANYBODY
WHAT
HAS
TO
L
LIVE
LIKE
WE
DOES
AINT
SO
MUCH
.
1
WOULD
UKE
TO
KNOW
WHAT'S
IN
THAT
LETTER,
THOUGH.
IT
J
SMELLED
REAL
pi
INTRIGUING
.
___
/
1
LADY,
AS
YOU
SAID
,
)
THIS
LETTER
CAME
L
FOR
ME
.
IT'S
PRIVATE
PROPERTY.
IF
YOU
WANT
SOMETHING
TO-READ,
_
BUY
YOURSELF
A
J
\
NEWSPAPER
-----
J
ain
T
YOU
GONNA
>
OPEN
.
.
little
boy
llll
toward
Often.\
bit
Uke
one.
What
do
you
By
EDWIN
BOUND
TO
WIN
—Planning
To
Expl.
uSsrer.
..j
i
,
\Nothing
wrong
there.\
he
mut-
,
he
p,rk
I
tred-
Then
he
strapped
a
headlight
on
’
Continued
WHY-(PITS
ALLTHG
SAtYE
TO
YOU
T
o
M
,
I
THINK
FLLTAKETHE
-
CANOE
AND
SADDLE
AROUND
TUE
ISLAND
—
I'D
LIKE
TO
SEE
WHAT
fT
LOOKS
UKE
!
j-
VJ
MAT'S
AT
THAT
END
OF
THE
HORSESHOE?
I
GUESS
BRIAR
I
AND
iVdU-LCTVGK,
TO
THE
CANOE
THEXN
—
FOR
i
T
oday
anyway
!
|
DEEP
WOODS
AND
fe
DESOLATION
.
LAD
—
P
1
ha
V
tt
been
there
]
MYSGLF
FR
ACES
—
:
*-
(TVtERER
SNAKES
THERE
A
PLENTY
AN'
—
i
poisonous
,
I
TOO
J
—
—
'
[
ALL
RIGHT,
LAD,
^
YE
’
VE
ATRIP
BEFORE
YE,FRTHE
ISLE'S
/
jjfr&
’
UN!
-I
9200
THE
DAILY
PRESS.
WHITE
PLAINS.
N.
Y,
THURSDAY.
APRIL
25.
172V
Pinocchio
in
America
t
a
hill-top,
drop-
pad
kjs
chin
on
his
hands
and
gaz
­
ed
Into
a
Ultle
doorway
that
opened
In
the
trunk
of
an
old
pine
tree.
He
e
far,
far
down
a
long
Ther
;
^
c
riding
on
an
ele
­
phant
with
a
crown
upon
hla
head.
There
was
one
prancing
past
with
a
iarge
gold
medal
plnnrd
upon
his
breast.
I»lnocchIo
could
read
the
words
upon
it
:
\For
Swimming
\
And
there
was
on*
dream,
a
gra
­
cious
and
lovely
one.
that
came
again
and
again.
It
was
a
tiny
pink
house
an
the
side
of
n
hill
net
about
with
olive
tree*.
There
were
a
goat
and
a
donkey
grazing
under
tha
trees,
and
a
dear
old
man
watching
them
from
the
doorway
or
the
little
house
different
place
but
that
was
only
natural.
Sometimes
it
was
white
Instead
of
pink.
There
were
days
when
Pinoeehlo
liked
white
better
than
pink,
but
he
usually
came
back
to
pink.
Sometimes
there
was
a
horse
In
I
ths
-dream
|
rjl
.
pa
d
of
a
donkey
but
In
the
end
Pinoeehlo
held
to
the
donkey.
A
donkey
a
nose
is
very
much
sorter
than
a
horse's
nose
5«
valvety
velvet.
Now
and
then
two
goats
appear-
ed
Instead
of
cine.
One
was
black
and
tan
and
one
was
gray
and
white.
There
was
alwnys
cart
for
Gepetto.
This
dream
grew
brighter
and
brighter,
and
Pinoeehlo.
watching
_
^happier
and
hapi
just
then
the
Watchful
ht£r,
a
rew'happlcr
and
happii
Watchful
Booster
med
far
over
Plnocchlo's
shAil-
der
and
slammed
the
door
shut.
But
not
before
Pinoeehlo
had
slip
­
ped
his
foot
In
tho
crack.
\Kr-krr-lck-kk-k-k
his
do.\
\It
would
never
dodf
I
were
never
to
see
the
blue
rone
again.\
said
Pinocchio.
“
Come
now.
come
now
This
has
besn
a
long
day.
Sharp'a
the
word
and
quick's
the
action\;
and
thi
From
that
day
on
Pinocchio
was
different.
Not
any
better,
perliape.
but
different.
For
one
thing,
was
very
quieL
For
another,
hr
not
so
hungry.
Worst
of
all.
to
godmother's
way
of
thinking,
was
far.
far
too
polite.
\Doctor.
I
wish
you
would
look
th*
child
over.
He
Isn't
feeling
right.
I
am
sure.\
\Where
does
It
hurt
you'\
asked
\U-e-everywherc
stammered
he.
TO
his
own
astonishment,
two
big
tears
came
loose
and
rolled
down
elthsr
side
of
his
nose.
The
doctor
frowned,
felt
the
pulse,
listened
to
the
heart,
and
poked
the
unhappy
stomach
of
the
\Nothing
wrong
there.\
he
mut-
LET
’
S
GET
TOGETHER
On
the
classified
page
we
are
able
to
introduce
you
to
people
who
will
be
pleased
to
meet
you.
Some
can
supply
the
articles
or
services
you
need
at
a
consider
­
able
saving
in
time,
energy
and
money,
and
others
will
be
glad
to
buy
what
yoU.have
to
offer.
THE
DAILY
PRESS
classified
ads
are
both
powerful
and
__
]
profitable
’
PHONE
WHITE
PLAINS
9200
Pop
Passes
Up
His
Chance
S
MATTER
POP
ByC.
M.
PAYNE
To
THE
POINT
FcR
PRcMtGVONS
TODAY.
LAD
—
A

Newspaper Page Text

1 KJCMOM IJJOO C+W«!E To WlW A -THOUSAND ■aen-vAies! , tPo'P! ffcETTrElf T-tlAf C ontest -L a - -i ONLY -V^A'l'E. To rn>u v / Two CAKes \ OF gOAT> A MAM at T-ff a TDOO'P \AJILL GlvE. A T+Ious A NT) •fcOOU-AVS To T+I e jlTH?iTOME T-HAT • (TEACHES T-H e .1^ A uj 'Ri&qr, ill ] ,TtU- i4lM,'73>UT I C an ' t \ S ee nw - hv *JL VsiE 5rHoUk4>N'T ' TAKE. A C-H an /GE.! TOTT u ^E- .Kwociriwi hi* forebud and paddled about Pinocchio ’ * throat with a nice new little oar. “ Nothing wrong here. He'* per ­ fectly all right. What did you think was wrong with him. God ­ mother?\ \H*'s so polite. Doctor.\ \Hm-m. A bad sign. Whon a boy* loo polite — m-rn-n — very hgd sign that.\ “ And he doesn't want to eat.\ “ Ah, that's very serious. When a boy Is polite and doesn't want to eat — ah-h — something very serious Is the matter.\ \But what la It. Doctor?\ \That's Just It. What Is It? These are symptoms.\ •Dear, dear! Of what. Doctor?\ \Of what alls him. of course. Find that out and you cure him\; and the doctor leaned back In his chair. \How can X And out?\ \Mostly you can't.\ \Can't he tell me?\ “ If he could ho wouldn't be a boy.\ \Why docan't he say what Is the mailer with him?\ \Because he doesn ’ t know him ­ self. They never do.\ And the doctor smiled happily, rose to his feet, and picked up his Utile black bag. \When you And out anything, send for me. I'll keep an eye on him myself and let you know If X lind out anything. Let's wish ourselves good luck\ and away he went humming a little song under hl» breath. It hadn't murh meaning, but It seemed to please him greatly, , for he n*ng It over and over. \From Wlmpledon to Wap- plcton Is fourteen mile. From Wnpjdeton to Wlm- piedon Is fourteen mile.\ hallway, a hallway that stretched oot for year* and years. And all along the hallway, one ex ­ actly behind the other, each with hla hands on the shoulder of the one In front, was a row of himself. Imagine. A row of Plnocchloa each exactly Uke the other save that each was a hair's breadth big ­ ger as they came toward him. and a hair ’ s breadth smaller as they went away from him. Each was forever a part of him. Each march ­ ed steadily forward and each marched steadily back. To Plnoc- ■chlo they seemed to be flashing by with terrific speed and all the while standing still. Smiles and glad flitted across his face as he watched the procession of the shadow children hr knew so well He almost cried at the sight of the llttlest one far down tho shad ­ owy line. He was so little and so faded thst he would scarcely have known him at all had it not been for hie very sharp nose and the one blue rose that was left of the firet paper dress Gepetto had made By GLENN CHAFFIN and HAL FORREST TAILSPIN TOMMY — Tommy ’ # In Luck / HERE IT IS! } IT ’ S A LETTER FOR j TOMMY > TOMKINS! f WHAT THE ' heck kino of AN ANlrtlLE IS A 6REA5E . \ MONKEY?/ JTH*T AIR-MAI LV ' FELLER ORORPED SOMETHIN ’ , ALL ’ RKHT-- WONDER iWMAT IT IS ? Jr Ha chuckled Aloud at the sight of e scarecrow flapping and kick ­ ing the ‘ crows out of a cornfield. A Watchful Rooster perched on the shoulder of another cast a shadow over his face. He smiled again at the Sight of a tousled little chap carrying a bowl of water In both hands, a scrap of rainbow showing from one corner of a torn pocket. Most delightful of all. each child In the procession held a tiny little creature by the hand. Strange lit ­ tle creatures they were, and strangely lovely, and Pinoeehlo knew them at once as his most pre- THE NEBBS — Gone, But Not Forgotten f WELL, MERC'S CAES AC'S 'v. CHECK AMD IT'S A PEACH \ .WE LOST A GOOD CUSTOMER. OUT L. SUESS MOTHER J V VJ|LL Be: GLAD TO Tbirrte hocus COUTlkAJAU-V REMIkiDlklG THE MlOULD BE SOOerv LEADER Mas. HE.lT ABOUT HER EACLV LIFE WHEN THEY BOTH WERE SERVANT GIRLS, LOAS TOO MUCH FOR UESZ SO SUE LEFT FOR HOME / HER &0-MG AWAY 'S OUST LIKE TAKING OCF A PAIR CC LEW i t ,(_, u T SUOES TO /- sound,' \Strangs.\ thought the doctor. \That noise- ought to waken the deaf and the dead.\ He trumpeted through hie hands \Pinocchlo-o! Hullo-o, Pinocchlo-o! Want to come f ............ \ Lightly an a chio scudded df He hopped inte doctor, \To Naples. \ \To Naples? of u boat ' curled leaf Plnoc- wn the sloping roof the scat beside the could take you.\ \Huh! Anybody could do tha(. I | thought doctors could do anything they wanted to do.\ \In reason. In reason. What do you want to go to Naples for?\ “ That's my home. Where Gepet- \I thought you ran away from there?\ r*l dkln't. I ran away from By FRANK GAS BUGGIES — A Letter For Alec \Two and the same thing\ \You sound like the Watchful Rooster. He keeps saying, Two and two.' and 'Look behind It.' You know what I'd like to do? I'd like to gel big enough to go home and buy a little house and a goat and a garden and ng trees and olive trees for Gcpctto. I could live with him anti feed the goat. I could work <iard and lake care of Gepe' to.\ \But you ran sway ----- \ - “ I tell you I didn't run away from Gepetto. I ran away from echooL I thought that America was a land where you did what you liked and if you didn't like It. you didn't do It. But It le worse than home for going to school. Do you have to go to school forever and ever? I don't wantto go to school \ “ What do you want to do? ” \I want to go home and play In : the puppet shows and make a lot j of money and buy Gepetto a pink , house and buy Urn ----- ” \That's line, bft haven't you got to go to school to learn tha trade? How are you going to be a puppet If 1 3 THE VERY IDEA OF THAT OLD SHE-HEN WANTING TO SEE MY BELOVED VIOLA ’ S SACRED LETTER . GOSH, I ’ M ALL A TREMBLE TO SEE ^ WHAT SHE SAYS ABOUT J ME NOT BEING AT ____ / THE PARTY. . HERE'S A LETTER C THAT'S COME FOR YOU. SMELLS ALL PERFUMERY LIKE A WOMAN MIGHT A WRIT IT. WHO D'YtXJ RECKON IT COULD A _ — ■ BEEN ? I'M ALL ,, ------- ---- 7 A FLUTTER , ^ « MR. SMART. J X?N J HUH! HE NEEDN'T T A 3EEN SO UPPITY. >. ANYBODY WHAT HAS TO L LIVE LIKE WE DOES AINT SO MUCH . 1 WOULD UKE TO KNOW WHAT'S IN THAT LETTER, THOUGH. IT J SMELLED REAL pi INTRIGUING . ___ / 1 LADY, AS YOU SAID , ) THIS LETTER CAME L FOR ME . IT'S PRIVATE PROPERTY. IF YOU WANT SOMETHING TO-READ, _ BUY YOURSELF A J \ NEWSPAPER ----- J ain T YOU GONNA > OPEN . . little boy llll toward Often.\ bit Uke one. What do you By EDWIN BOUND TO WIN —Planning To Expl. uSsrer. ..j i , \Nothing wrong there.\ he mut- , he p,rk I tred- Then he strapped a headlight on ’ Continued WHY-(PITS ALLTHG SAtYE TO YOU T o M , I THINK FLLTAKETHE - CANOE AND SADDLE AROUND TUE ISLAND — I'D LIKE TO SEE WHAT fT LOOKS UKE ! j- VJ MAT'S AT THAT END OF THE HORSESHOE? I GUESS BRIAR I AND iVdU-LCTVGK, TO THE CANOE THEXN — FOR i T oday anyway ! | DEEP WOODS AND fe DESOLATION . LAD — P 1 ha V tt been there ] MYSGLF FR ACES — : *- (TVtERER SNAKES THERE A PLENTY AN' — i poisonous , I TOO J — — ' [ ALL RIGHT, LAD, ^ YE ’ VE ATRIP BEFORE YE,FRTHE ISLE'S / jjfr& ’ UN! -I 9200 THE DAILY PRESS. WHITE PLAINS. N. Y, THURSDAY. APRIL 25. 172V Pinocchio in America t a hill-top, drop- pad kjs chin on his hands and gaz ­ ed Into a Ultle doorway that opened In the trunk of an old pine tree. He e far, far down a long Ther ; ^ c riding on an ele ­ phant with a crown upon hla head. There was one prancing past with a iarge gold medal plnnrd upon his breast. I»lnocchIo could read the words upon it : \For Swimming \ And there was on* dream, a gra ­ cious and lovely one. that came again and again. It was a tiny pink house an the side of n hill net about with olive tree*. There were a goat and a donkey grazing under tha trees, and a dear old man watching them from the doorway or the little house different place but that was only natural. Sometimes it was white Instead of pink. There were days when Pinoeehlo liked white better than pink, but he usually came back to pink. Sometimes there was a horse In I ths -dream | rjl . pa d of a donkey but In the end Pinoeehlo held to the donkey. A donkey a nose is very much sorter than a horse's nose 5« valvety velvet. Now and then two goats appear- ed Instead of cine. One was black and tan and one was gray and white. There was alwnys cart for Gepetto. This dream grew brighter and brighter, and Pinoeehlo. watching _ ^happier and hapi just then the Watchful ht£r, a rew'happlcr and happii Watchful Booster med far over Plnocchlo's shAil- der and slammed the door shut. But not before Pinoeehlo had slip ­ ped his foot In tho crack. \Kr-krr-lck-kk-k-k his do.\ \It would never dodf I were never to see the blue rone again.\ said Pinocchio. “ Come now. come now This has besn a long day. Sharp'a the word and quick's the action\; and thi From that day on Pinocchio was different. Not any better, perliape. but different. For one thing, was very quieL For another, hr not so hungry. Worst of all. to godmother's way of thinking, was far. far too polite. \Doctor. I wish you would look th* child over. He Isn't feeling right. I am sure.\ \Where does It hurt you'\ asked \U-e-everywherc stammered he. TO his own astonishment, two big tears came loose and rolled down elthsr side of his nose. The doctor frowned, felt the pulse, listened to the heart, and poked the unhappy stomach of the \Nothing wrong there.\ he mut- LET ’ S GET TOGETHER On the classified page we are able to introduce you to people who will be pleased to meet you. Some can supply the articles or services you need at a consider ­ able saving in time, energy and money, and others will be glad to buy what yoU.have to offer. THE DAILY PRESS classified ads are both powerful and __ ] profitable ’ PHONE WHITE PLAINS 9200 Pop Passes Up His Chance S MATTER POP ByC. M. PAYNE To THE POINT FcR PRcMtGVONS TODAY. LAD — A